Contact Pulse Of Your City

The site is run by a single person — Kirk Johnson — and every message routed through the channels below comes directly to me. I read everything, I respond to most messages within 48 hours, and I treat the small share of corrections and complaints I receive as the most valuable signal I get from readers.

Email

The primary contact address is feedback@exploreallplaces.com. Every message — corrections, removal requests, advertising enquiries, partnership pitches, accessibility reports, press questions, reader suggestions — goes to that single inbox and is read personally. I prefer email over web forms because it leaves a written record on your end as well as mine, and because it gives me the freedom to write a real answer rather than a templated reply.

✉️ Email feedback@exploreallplaces.com

What to include for the fastest response

Response times

Most messages get a reply within 48 hours, and almost all within a week. Corrections jump the queue — if you flag a factual error, the fix usually goes out the same day. Long-form feature requests can take longer because I scope them properly before answering. If you've waited more than ten days without a reply, please send a follow-up; mail providers do occasionally lose messages, and a polite second nudge is the most reliable way to surface a missed email.

Press, podcast and academic inquiries

I'm happy to talk about how the site works, why it was built, and what the practical limits of city-aware static-web publishing are. For interviews and citations, email is the right channel. I'll usually respond with availability and a short bio you can quote.

Mailing address

The site is operated from Canada. A mailing address is not published here because this is a one-person operation run out of a private residence; please use email for all written correspondence. For formal legal notice, use the email address above and request a mailing address in reply — I'll provide one on a case-by-case basis.

What I can't help with

I cannot make reservations on your behalf, change a price at a third-party retailer, or update someone else's listing. If a restaurant's hours are wrong on the site I'll fix it; if a restaurant's hours are wrong on Google Maps, you'll need to ask the restaurant or Google. The same goes for sports schedules, ticket prices and store flyers — every card on the site links to the authoritative third-party source, and that source is who you'll need to contact for changes to their data.

Page last reviewed: May 21, 2026.